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= | tell the . ; . German people what to do with their " ® Dall\ Alas’t” Emplre political affairs but when he starts to tell them what to do with their affairs of the heart we ROBERT ‘V.‘ BE! R - - Editor and Manager suspect it will prove to be quite another matter. by _the and Main unday Second exce NY at PRINTING COMPA )i Juneau, Alash S | Point Barrow sad and back down to the States with the bodies of Will Rogers and Wiley Post, but it T SUBSCRIPTION RATES. rekindles anew in the minds of Alaskans the faith Delivered by carrier In Juneau and Douglas for $1.25 |and confidence they have always had in this great Baia at fie followlng rtes: lier and PAA, the organization he represents. Juneau as Second C the Post Office pa i 2.00; six months, in advance, ce, $1.25 1 favor if they will promptly g AR i "w"'j”’ failure or irregularity |j¢ appears that Congress is really about to adjourn Telephopes: News Office, Gu2; Business Office, 374. and the boys will have to go home and face their MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. constituents. The Associatcd Press is exclusively entitled to the B O ST S i'."ur'“.fm".’,?}“!m"fl ‘-: I‘s '<“!'4n“\h:‘l' l:ul‘ :llul‘ ‘.]:.«‘, the With the Fair but three weeks away, it causes local news published herein _ one to wonder just where summer has gone. ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER S T AT O I THAT OF A 7 PUBLICATION TTide x — S JHAT OF AN O HER Sid ST Big Uplift at the Bar. (Kansas City Star.) The moral tone of the barroom is troubling St. Louis. We had suspected there was something wrong with the post-prohibition barroom, but we |couldn’t put our finger on the difficulty. A smart city official in St. Louis pointed it right out, anu it is simple, once you understand it. The women |are taking their lquor standing up. | It seems that there is something insidiously |immoral in the modern custom of women shouldering ;thctr way to the mahogany bar, slapping a foot to jthe brass rail and crooking an elbow. At least that lis the way St. Louis finds it, and hereafter the {women are going to have to sit down and take {their poison in a ladylike manner. | Women had just about coddled |the belief that they had all the equal rights Susan {B. Anthony and her compatriots went to battle for. {Well, maybe they are right at that, because Susan Many dramatic stories have come out of the g probably never suspected the time would come North but could have gripped the hearts of when her seek equal saloon privileges America more than that graphic account told })Y:wll.h men. But woman has advanced considerably Sergeant anley R. Morgan, operator-in-charge of 'since her day and has eyes fixed upon heights the Signal Corps station at Point Barrow, of recov-‘Whl('hl lblln‘ I«NI nlt'm‘l‘ul;mn \;l‘mil]ldg have regarded as At o R 4 {11 | unscalable, including bar privileges. gégip”::; \\l’:](“vrx;z;lgd planaiing holisny ol Al right-thinking people will be gratified to s g know that at last a means has been discovered for Centered around two of the best known and best raising the moral tone of the saloon. So many loved men in this country, or in the world, Sergeant , . ¢ proplems have such simple solutions, and Morgan'’s straightforward and accurate account Writ- w. yow to the great city of St. Louis as it steps ten especially for the Associated Press and-appear-|ywell out into the lead in this vast reform. ing exclusively in The Empire and Associated Pr 1 papers throughout the country, painted a dramatic| picture of the tragic end of the two great men. Picture those bruised and broken bodies hauled from the sad wreckage, wrapped in eiderdown sleep- —— A GRIPPING EPIC OF THE NORTH. none sex would A Once- amous Politician. (New York Times.) To but few now in active politics will the name ing bags found in the plane, placed tenderly in the 'of Frank Hitchcock, who died in Arizona recently, native skinboat and towed behind Sergeant Morgan's carry vivid memories. But in his day he was a powered whaleboat into Barrow. .leading actor on the political stage in this country. “The Eskimo boys began to sing a funeral hymn |The chief office which he held for a brief period in the Eskimo dialect,” said Sergeant Morgan, “and |Was that of Postmaster General. There his org: |izing ability and extraordinary memory for names {and faces had sufficient scope, one would think. But whatever were his official duties, his real work, |in which he took delight fer many years, was | political manipulation. He came to have “Silently we bore the bodies from the beach 10 yepytation for uncanny skill in rounding up dele- soon all the voices joined in singing which continued arrival in Barrow.” arrived Barrow ergeant goes on: until our As the; and as the the singing ceased at the hospital. It is doubtful if any person in this!gates for State and national conventions that his village slept that night All sat around the hos- services were in great demand. Any candidate pital with bowed heads. No one had the heart to for high office, or any campaign committee, able talk.” |to announce an alliance with Frank Hitchcock as Great eulogies will be made over the earthly manager, was thought to have won half the battle &) 2 i i reat or small, and at i vers’ ¢ .y “Post, but nothing |17 advance. His activities, grea A i s Gl ¥ “lhc end becoming less successful, lasted over several flight that Joe Crosson made to| themselves into | such al THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1935 120 YEARS AGO From The Empire ————— 3 | AUGUST 19, 1915 The White Star liner Arabic, one of the largest English merchantmen, was torpedoed and sunk by a Ger- man submarine, off Fastnet, and 48 | paszengers and her entire crew were |drowned. London afternoon papers reprinted President Wilson’s warn- ing to the German government, is- | sued at Washington on July 21. The ia(‘coums laid special emphasis on |the final paragraph of the Presi- {dent’s document, which | senger vessels without warning. The 28-foot launch Alaskan, of Juneau, with Billie Woodworth and Cy 'Confer as passengers, arrived here after a thrilling experience in which the ship had been blown out | to sea at Dixon’s Entrance, had en- gine trouble, lost her sail and her dingy, and drifted for three days and nights in a storm. She was picked up by the fishing boat Susie and towed here. The Commercial Club of Fairbank and the citizens of the Tanana be- gan a campaign for a larger and better mail service during the win- ter. People on both sides of the chan- | nel witnessed a spectacle unusual t» this section when an enormous shooting star burst into myriad fragments—like som etremendous- ly large skyrocket—just over Tread- well, The Firemen's Ball was held at the Treadwell Club at 9 o'clock pam. Music was supplied by the Tread- well Band, and midnight lunch erved at the Treadwell hoarding house. W. G. Beattle, superintendent of native schools in Alaska, left on the Humboldt for a brief visit in Skagway. Col. W. P. Richardson, President of the Alaska Road Commission, announced that on the arrival of he necessary material for the bridge that the Valdez road to the Interior will be open soon. The commission has made every effort possible to | keep the road open as it is the only one into the interior at present, the Cordova road and the Skagway rail- road having been washed out in re- cent high water i Judge and Mrs. John Randolph that can be said nor written will carry grenlermdmmmmuum. 1T\lfkm'_ Jr., o_r Nomf‘, were shown tribute to the memory of these beloved ‘ulvonturcrs[ So adroit a player of the political game could"y““o“” and its environs and ex- than that Eskimo funeral dire chanted as the not be expected to take a high moral view of it, presed th.emselvesA as greatly im- strange cortege slowly wended its way into the and Mr. Hitchcock did not. At times he was|Pressed with the city. Arctic outpost, Barrow. Far out on the rim of the rather cynical about it, though never bitter. He ) B world these people of another race paid their|was amused rather than offended by criticism of | The Finnish Social Club held a homage in their own way. yhis methods. Were they not effective? That was Stanley Morgan and the Associated Press have enough for him. It was also enough for most of made it possible for the world to know about this/the politiclans who entrusted their cases to him. land of the midnight Mr. Hitchcock came up through an older school of politics, which taught that the |was a thing to swear by, not at, and that it would {be both inexpedient and improper to apply to a boss the lines which James Russell Lowell wrote: Skilled to pull wires, he battles na- ture’s hope, ‘Who sure intended him to stretch a rope. absorbing epic staged in the cun. IT"S A BIG ORDER. At last Herr Hitler, or his number one Jew hater, Julius Streicher, appears to have bitten off more than he can chew. Streicher has issued orders to arrest on the spot all Jews seen in puhlic with “German girls,” and to obtain the names of all] Those midget coins Congress is now considering Jews who have announced intentions of marrying will be nothing more than pocket dandruff.—(Ohio Aryans. State Journal.) Many men and women, too, have attempted to| R —— ] fool around with Dan Cupid but the record to date' GoOvernment of the lobbies, by the lobbies and indicates that no one has ever been able to do [°F the lobbies. . . .—(Buffalo Courier-Express.) very much about directing the darts of this able R archer. As a matter of further record, it has often been that interference with his efforts Perhaps Congress will yet learn to beware lob- bies bearing telegrams.—(Buffalo Courier-Express.) recorded Huey Long will have his gag, as when he says appeal is to the intelligent.—(Toledo Blade.) many times leads to furthering his cause. It may be that the great man of Germany can hi Following in Footst cps of Their Fathers- T {Wadsworth {Following in the footsteps of their distinguished fathers, these nine members of congress are the second generation to occupy seats in the nation's highest legislative body. Three senators and six representatives comprise the group which includes Hamilton Fish, Jr., of Garrison, N. Y.; Robert L. Bacon, of Old Westbury, N. Y.; Paul J. Kvale of William B. Bankhead Benson, Minn.; James W. Wadsworth, Geneseo, N. Y ; Martin Dies, Oronge, Tex.; William B. Bank- head, Jasper, Ala.; Senator Robert La Follette, Jr., of Wisconsin; Senator Bennett Champ Clark, of Missouri, and Senator John Bankhead of Alabama. Another of the famous La Follette family, Phil, brother of “Young Bob”, is governor of Wisconsin, “organization” | |dance at Turner's Studio. An auc- | tion sale of fancy handwork was also held. Visitors were welcome | and admission free. | Weather: Maximum, 68; mini- mum, 30; clear. —————— BIRTH CONTROL IS DENOUNCED ST. PAUL, Minn, August 19.— | Archbishop John Gregory Murray trol organizations were like the Dil- linger mob ,as both, he said, were “organized to commit murder. I se> little difference between killing an |unborn child and a living person,” | the Archbishop asserted in an in- terview replying to criticism aimed at him by Margaret Sanger of the | National Committee on Federal Leg- |islation for Birth Control. Archbishop Murray made the charge on the eve of an official pro- nouncement throughout the arch- diocese, ordering all Catholic: to renounce membership and employ- ment in organizations advocating birth control or sterilization. The decree read by all masses in the nurses and social workers, as well | as laymen. | SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! | finaneial -institutions, | of experience. requirements, as in the forward view. strongly | warned Germany from sinking pas- | charged Saturday that Birth Con-| diocese Sunday, affects physicians, | The Forward View The B. M. Behrends Bank, oldest of Alaska’s But in its attitude to its customers and their provided for their service, this bank takes People . . . or businesses . . . planning for a broader future find this institution as re- sponsive as it is responsible. ..v / 1 The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska HAPPY —BIRTHDAY AUGUST 19 Warren Geddes Carl Weidman Florence Rutherford Audrey Dudueff “The stars incline Horoscope but do not compel” MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1935 Mingled good and evil planetary influences are foreseen for today, according to astrology. Conditions may be unstable and uncertain. It is a fortunate rule under which 'to make ambitious plans, for there are certainly to be world demands| | for enterprise and agrgessive poh-! ‘ cies This is not a day conducive to do- | ! mestic harmonies. Younger members | lof the family may cause concern | because of premature romances, in-| | clinations to borrow the family mo- | | tor car and aversion to advice. P | ents are warned not to precipi-| tate sions or quarrels with sons| or daughters, for, according to the| seers, the rising generation is cni it; way toward improving condi- | tions muddled by their elders. I | Writing is well directed toddy. Not | only are authors and newspaper | workers subject to promising as-) pects but letters too may bring gaol“ returns in money. Business me and women should attend to corre- spondence. 1 | Minds should be closed to evil re- ports under this planetary govern- ment as there are influences tend- ing toward bitter enmities. Many will see the worst instead of the best in human endeavors. Pessimism is ,to be avoided. ! Workers are under fortunate in- fluences that should extend to farmers and other industries. Real estate now regains its lure for in-| | vestors, | Wealth from the earth is forecast. This will come through mines as! well as agriculture. Deposits of rare | minerals will be discovered. 1 Persons whose birthdate it is! have the augury of a year of unex-; pected experiences including, for some, sudden journeys. Entangle. ments of various sorts are presaged. Children born on this day prob- ably will be original in: character and inventive in mind. These sub- Jects of Leo may have strong Virzo traits. il Orville Wright, noted airplane in- | ventor, was born on this day, 1871. Others who have celebrated it as a birthday include Bernard M. Bar- uch, financier and economist, 1870; Colleen Moore, motion picture ac- tress, 1902. (Copyright, 1935) ———-— | THREE CROWIY CLRANDY is aged in the wood eighteen months | —longer than any domestic brandy | ® made sinc the repeal of prohibi- tion. Ask your dealer to show |you. —adv. ————— SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! | U. 8. Federal and Territorial | Bldg., Juneau, Alaska. Office of the | Custodian.—Sealed bids in duplicate |subject to the conditions contained (herein will be publicly opened in this office at 2:00 p.m., Sept. 14, 1935, for furnishing all labor and |materials and performing all work |for changes in Post Office screen,| ete. at this building in accordance {with the specification, copies of |which may be obtained from the |custodian only. Albert Wile, Cus- | todian. First publication, Aug. 15, 1935, Last publication, Aug. 19, 1935. Guy Smith DRUGS PUROLA REMEDIES PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED | Front St Next Coliseum PHONE 97—Free Delivery respects the lessons the facilities it has -y { ZORIC DRY CLEANING e dort Water Washiag ) Tour ALASKA LAUNDRY PHONE 15 . TOTEM Groca y James Ramsay & Son FRESH FRUITS and VECGETABLES FRESH MEATS Phone 182 FreeDelivery —— I H.S. GRAVES | “Tue Clothing Man” [ Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx “'~thing T PAINYL-CILS Builders’ and Shelf HARDARE By . GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates | E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 Phone 4753 GENERAL MOTORS | and ' MAYTAG PRODUCT® | W.P.JOHNSON T N GARLAND BOGGAN Hardwcod Floors Waxing Polishing Sanding PHONE 582 | MUSICIANS LOCAL NO. 1 l | | | Meets Second and Fourth Sun- days Every Month—3 P, M. DUDE HAYNES, Secretary . | BETTY MAC | BEAUTY SHOP In New Location at | 12th anC B Streets | | PHONE 547 | oo IT’S Wise to Cali 8 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel Oil Coal Transfer JUNEAU-YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition . | i | | | . . | | | | |. TYPEWRITERS RENTED | | $5.00 per month | | J. B. Burford & Co. | “Our doorstep is worn by | satisfied customers” | oo 8 JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STORE” P. O. Substation No, 1 FREE DELIVERY JEE———— LUDWIG NELSON | PROFESSIONAL Helene W. L. Albrecht | | PHYSIOTHERAPY ‘ | | <Zassage, Electricity, Infra Red Ray, Medical Gymnastics. 307 Goldsteir Building Phone Office, 21¢ | DRS.KASER & FREEBURGHE | DENTISTS 1 Blomgren Building | PHONE 56 | Hours 9 am. to 9 pm. { Dr. C. P. Jenne DENTIST Rooms 8 and 9 Valentine Building | Telephone 176 | Dr. Richard Willixms DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE I Gastineau Building | Phone 451 | DENTIST | Hours 9 am. to 6 pm, | SEWARD RUILDING | of! o Opt. D. Graduate Angeles Col- | lege of Optometry and | Opthalmology ! Glasses Fitted Lenses Grosnd o DR. H. VANCE OSTEOPATH Uonsultation and examination Free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 8:30 and by appointment. Office Grand Apts., near Gas- tineau Hotel. Phone 177 | Harry Race DRUGGIST “The Squibb Store” 1% * [ PSS t W EDSS |{ CONSTRUCTICN CO. Phore 107 - Juneau | PSR CS SNSRI Cigars Cigarettes Candy | ' The | New | Axctic Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Room ELEVATOR SERVICE 8. ZYNDA, Prop. || IDEAL PAINT SHOP | It If's Paint We Have It! | | WENDT & GARSTER | PHONE 549 THE BEST TAP BEER s INTOWN! - | . * THE MINERS' Recreation Parlors and Liquor Store BILL DOUGLAS Fraternal Societies 7 op =iz Gastineau Channel J, B. P. 0. ELKS meets every second and fourth Wednesday at 8 p. m. Visiting brothers wel« come. M. E. Monagle, Ex- a'ted Ruler, M. H. Sides, Secretary KNIGHTS_OF COLUMPUS Seghers Council No. 1760. Meetings second nd last Monday at 7:30 p. m. Transient brotrers urged to at- tend. Cowrs" Cham- bers. ®ifth St. JOHN F. MULLEN, ‘ic. R, #. 1. TURNER, Secretary MOUNT JUNEAU LODGE NO. 141 Second and Fourth Mon« HOW *RD D, STABLER, day of each month ir Scottiuh F.it2 Temple, Worshipfui Master; JAMES W. LEIVERS, Secretary. beginning at 7:30 p.m DOUGLAS Y%E AERIE e 17, F. 0. E. %' cets first and third Mondays, § 'p.m., Eagles' Hall, Douglas. Visiting brothers welcome. J. B. Martin, w.- P, N. Cashen, Secretary. & e e s ) | Our Lucks go any place any | time. A tank for Dieszl Oil | and a tank for crude oil save | burner trouble. | FHONE 149; NIGHT 148 | 4 RELIABLE TRANSFER Commercial Adjust- ment & Rating Bureau Coperating with White Serve ice Bureau I Room 1—Shattuck Bldg. | ‘We have 5,000 local ratings | H | on file | [ JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE “Exclusive but not Expensive” Lingerte, Coats, Dresses, Hosiery and Hats McCAUL MOTOR Y COMPANY | Dodge and Plymouth Dealers 1 | [ B B s sl L FQORD AGENCY, (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAS—OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street e | Phone | e s red For very prompt LIQUOR DELIVERY P THE JUNEAU LAUNDRY Franklin Street betweem Front and Second Streets PHONE 358 P